NFL star Kurt Warner retires |
Written by Eric Tiansay |
Monday, 01 February 2010 03:19 PM America/New_York |
Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kurt Warner, whose book with his wife, Brenda, First Things First: The Rules of Being a Warner (Tyndale House Publishers), made the New York Times best-seller list last year, has retired. Warner, 38, announced his retirement last Friday, saying he was walking away from the game after 12 seasons while he still could walk. "Befitting the devout Christian that he is, Warner's career was defined by ascension and resurrection," The Arizona Republic observed. "He made it to the NFL after spending time playing in Europe, the Arena League and stocking shelves at the Hi-Vee Grocery Store back home in Iowa. He helped two moribund franchises, the St. Louis Rams and Arizona Cardinals, make it to three Super Bowls, winning two MVP awards and making four Pro Bowl appearances along the way." ESPN.com columnist Seth Wickersham added: "Thanks for the religion. Some athletes give their life to Jesus Christ as a PR move; some are ripe with hypocrisy; some just say offensive things. Warner always expressed his faith without trivializing it for us." Warner brought a Bible to his retirement news conference. "As always, as it started back in 1999 when I was up on a podium holding up a (Super Bowl) trophy, the first thing I want to do is give thanks to God," he said. "My Lord Jesus brought me here. I know He brought me here for a purpose. It has been an amazing ride."
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